Vertically oriented spring and energy transfers

Suppose there is a spring pointed vertically upwards. Further, suppose that the spring is compressed a distance x so that it stores some potential energy. A mass is then placed on top of the spring. Assume all energy is conserved.

Here's the question: upon releasing the spring, what is the kinetic energy of the ball as it passes the equilibrium position of the spring? Is it equal in magnitude to (1/2)kx^2 where x is the amount the spring is compressed, or is it (1/2)kx^2 - mgx?

My TA said the former is correct, while I cannot figure out why it is not the latter. My reasoning: as the ball is rising from its initial height (the point at which the spring is fully compressed) some of that energy is being converted to gravitational potential energy. The rest goes to kinetic energy.

Suppose there is a spring pointed vertically upwards. Further, suppose that the spring is compressed a distance x so that it stores some potential energy. A mass is then placed on top of the spring. Assume all energy is conserved.

Here's the question: upon releasing the spring, what is the kinetic energy of the ball as it passes the equilibrium position of the spring? Is it equal in magnitude to (1/2)kx^2 where x is the amount the spring is compressed, or is it (1/2)kx^2 - mgx?

My TA said the former is correct, while I cannot figure out why it is not the latter. My reasoning: as the ball is rising from its initial height (the point at which the spring is fully compressed) some of that energy is being converted to gravitational potential energy. The rest goes to kinetic energy.

Any insight will be greatly appreciated,
-Zachary Lindsey

Who is correct depends on whether x is the amount the spring is compressed from its free equilibrium length or that from its equilibrium length with the mass sitting on it. If it is the former, you are correct. If it's the later, your TA is correct.

To see this, let's let y be the distance the mass is sitting above the spring's free equilibrium position. Then, the potential energy is:

Staff: Mentor

Suppose there is a spring pointed vertically upwards. Further, suppose that the spring is compressed a distance x so that it stores some potential energy.

I presumed that x measures the compression from the uncompressed position of the spring. Only later is a mass involved:

A mass is then placed on top of the spring.

Here's the question: upon releasing the spring, what is the kinetic energy of the ball as it passes the equilibrium position of the spring?

The answer to that question depends on the meaning of "equilibrium postion" and where x is measured from. If, as I assumed from your description, x is measured from the uncompressed position of the spring (and equilibrium means x = 0), then 1/2kx^2 represents spring PE only and does not include gravitational PE.

But, as Parlyne explained, if x is measured from the equilibrium position of the mass-spring system (which is not the uncompressed position of the spring), then 1/2kx^2 represents changes in both spring PE and gravitational PE together.

CaptainZappo: Better tell us exactly what the TA stated, not your interpretation of it (if you can recall).

Regardless of what the TA says, learn what Parlyne explained and you'll be ahead of the game.